Dr. Peter Marks, the Food and Drug Administration’s top vaccine regulator, has resigned, an official at the Department of Health and Human Services said Friday.
“If Peter Marks does not want to get behind restoring science to its golden standard and promoting radical transparency, then he has no place at FDA under the strong leadership of Secretary Kennedy,” a spokesperson at HHS said, referring to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
A person familiar with the matter told NBC News that Marks was forced out.

In a resignation letter to acting FDA Commissioner Sara Brenner, Marks wrote that undermining confidence in vaccines is “irresponsible, detrimental to public health, and a clear danger to our nation’s health, safety, and security.”
He said he had been willing to work with Kennedy to address any concerns about vaccine safety and transparency.
“However, it has become clear that truth and transparency are not desired by the secretary, but rather he wishes subservient confirmation of his misinformation and lies,” Marks wrote.
Marks did not respond to a request for comment.
Marks had led the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research since 2016. The division is responsible for assuring the safety and effectiveness of a number of medical products, including vaccines.
Marks helped lead the nation through the Covid pandemic, playing a key role in authorizing the first Covid vaccines in late 2020, from first Pfizer-BioNTech and then, shortly after, Moderna. He helped launch Operation Warp Speed, the first Trump administration's private-public partnership to quickly develop the vaccines.

Kennedy, an anti-vaccine activist who has been critical of the Covid vaccines, filed a citizens’ petition in 2021 requesting that the FDA revoke the authorization of the vaccines. The same year, he described the Covid vaccine as the “deadliest vaccine ever made.”
Kennedy has also worked to undermine confidence in the measles vaccine amid the largest outbreak in the United States since 2019. While he has said vaccines protect children from the measles, he has also said the decision to vaccinate is a “personal” one.
In a recent interview with Sean Hannity on Fox News, Kennedy said the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine “does cause deaths every year.”
No deaths have been linked to the MMR vaccine in healthy people, according to the Infectious Disease Society of America. The vaccine is not recommending for immunocompromised people.
“The ongoing multistate measles outbreak that is particularly severe in Texas reminds us of what happens when confidence in well-established science underlying public health and well-being is undermined,” Marks wrote in his resignation letter.
“Measles, which killed more than 100,000 unvaccinated children last year in Africa and Asia owing to pneumonitis and encephalitis caused by the virus, had been eliminated from our shores,” he wrote.